Getting the whole world vaccinated against covid MUST be a priority. It’s unconscionable that close to zero people in low-income countries have been vaccinated so far. This is important to absolutely everybody for three reasons...
...1) The ethics of only vaccinating a quarter of the planet should be unthinkable to us. 2) For many reasons, we will have vulnerable people who are not protected by the vaccine, now and in the future. These people will be at risk on an ongoing basis from imported cases if...
...the virus continues to circulate globally. 3) The longer the virus thrives, the higher the chance of mutations, which could make any vaccine less effective or ineffective....
...There has been a lot of chat lately around “we should give leftover vaccines to LICs” after we’re finished our rollouts in the west. Most chat seems to be about donating vials. This is well intentioned and supply is DEFINITELY a problem. But we need to push politicians...
...to do much more. While public health doctors talking about health infrastructure is boring as balls, just donating vaccines to LICs won’t result in good coverage. I’ve been involved in vaccination programmes in Africa and Asia and here are the kinds of barriers I’ve seen...
....A) Insufficient community engagement-I saw a whole community susceptible to disease because they were told their vaccines were impregnated with lifelong contraceptives because the west was trying to reduce their birth rates. B) No electricity to power simple vaccine fridges..
..colleagues in aid agencies estimate that there needs to be an extra 200,000 fridges + electricity to power them in sub-saharan Africa just to keep up with non-covid vaccination. C) No physical access to vaccines for people because there was no diesel to deliver the vaccines...
..or regions were cut off by flooding or there was too much civil unrest for healthcare workers to safety vaccinate the people. I’ve seen enough awful deaths from vaccine-preventable illnesses in LICs to know that the existence of a vaccine doesn’t mean access to a vaccine...
...The solutions are complex and take time. It’s not about leftover vaccines. The golden rule of pandemics is that you need to go earlier+harder than you think. We need to put serious effort into helping low and middle income countries strengthen their vaccine infrastructure...
...Please believe me-throwing money and vaccines at this problem isn’t enough. We need to really engage at a political level with people like @gavi @UNICEF @SaveUKNews We need to take as much interest in the vaccine delivery plans of LICs as we do in our own plans....
...We’re not safe until were all safe. And we’re not all going to be safe if we delay much longer. Make this a doorstep issue for your politicians.

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More from @NICU_doc_salone

22 Jan
I’ve been delighted to see the sudden surge in support for mandatory hotel quarantine (MHQ) in Ireland, with the aim of achieving zero covid. While it is, on balance, the best option, I fear that some commentators have underestimated the challenges. Here are some examples....
...1) MHQ is frequently framed as a temporising measure, with the aim of establishing quarantine-free travel bubbles with other zero covid regions. Not many countries have achieved zero community transmission. But in those that have, travel bubbles have been vanishingly rare...
...2) MHQ is super strict. The point of it is that it would allow Ireland to open up society again. If you miss cases in that context, you let infectious people into a country where socialising is the norm. The result is explosive outbreaks. In countries that have MHQ, you...
Read 10 tweets
29 Nov 20
My favourite thing about this week is that the Irish government went to outbreak school 😂 Naturally, the department of finance and Ernst&Young led the teaching. Public health weren’t needed because they had “data guys” instead.....
...The department of finance led with this cracker. Their advanced data mining revealed the presence a link between health, economics and society....
.....This graph has since been used to estimate the ideal number of deaths in a population. Hat tip to @conorsmith .....
Read 8 tweets
30 Oct 20
I know a thread on a contractual issue is never going to be one of the greats. But my Irish colleagues might take industrial action and it’s important to tell people why, before inevitable political mudslinging starts. This issue is about pandemic safety, so I’ll try to explain..
....in Ireland, when you finish medical school, you can go on and do specialty training. It takes years and there are lots of awful exams, but you get there in the end and you qualify as a consultant. And then the @HSE_HR give you a consultant contract. Except for public health..
....Decades ago, someone in the dept of health decided that public health doctors were so useless as to require unique treatment and an individual contract. This was called a “specialist” contract, and was generally just a crappy version of a consultant contract. It meant you...
Read 18 tweets
21 Oct 20
The pandemic response in Ireland has understandably led to quite a bit of confusion and things are changing rapidly, from lockdowns to school closures. So I thought I’d write a thread on what might, and might not, work well in a country like Ireland with over 1000 cases per day..
..Recurring lockdowns don’t work. Well, it depends on what you mean by “work”. They’re v good at getting cases numbers low. But they don’t change any of the underlying conditions that allowed the virus to multiply in the first place. So, once society opens up, cases go up again..
..I’m slightly concerned that people are being fed a narrative that reads “if we do this lockdown right, we can stop this virus”. It may well get us low cases for Xmas, but I’d anticipate another lockdown around Easter, though I hope I’m wrong about that...
Read 31 tweets
20 Jun 20
Five things I’ve done in the last year as a public health doctor that, like most of what we do, flies under the radar....
1) Our surveillance system found disease-causing mosquitoes in an area where they shouldn’t be. We developed a plan to eradicate them, which we did, and followed up with continued surveillance to make sure they were gone. Nobody became unwell.
2) Managed a pertussis (whooping cough) outbreak in a shelter for a vulnerable population with quite a few very young babies living there. After we implemented the outbreak management plan, nobody else became unwell.
Read 12 tweets
7 Mar 20
In trying to make sense of what might seem like confusing or inconsistent decisions around #COVIDー19 interventions at the population level it might be helpful to look at the different phases of a pandemic and what type of control measures happen during each phase. This is....
....the Australian pandemic plan. It’s publicly available. Ireland will have a VERY similar plan, though the names of the phases might be different. PHASE 1: Preparedness; This is when planning happens. It’s ongoing, with meetings, desktop exercises and pressure testing.....
.....PHASE 2: Standby; This phase kicks in when there’s sustained transmission overseas. When China saw the situation get bad, most countries stepped into this phase. It’s enhanced level of preparation. Lots of banal work goes on behind the scenes, from making sure local plans...
Read 19 tweets

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